Lunch changes annoy some students

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Heather Bathen, Waterloo schools director of food services, hasn’t heard similar complaints about portion size, however many East High Schools students last year were already criticizing the healthy options the district began to offer as a way of easing into the new requirements.

Jacque Bilyeu Holmes is a farm-to-school coordinator for the Center for Energy & Environmental Education on the University of Northern Iowa campus. She works with several small Northeast Iowa school districts to meet the federal requirements and add locally grown food and from-scratch cooking to their menus.

She said public resistance has been difficult for some districts, but they see the changes as a positive.

“This is a good thing. These changes are better for kids,” Holmes said. “We’ve had push back, with kids saying ‘Oh, we’re hungry.’ But there are so many fruits and vegetables. I had a student say they can’t get full on fruits and vegetables, that it is ‘rabbit food.’ But you can get full off of rabbit food. This is just a paradigm shift. A meal is not just meat and potatoes. That is kind of how we got in trouble with our obesity rate in the first place.”

Holmes said parents should support schools’ efforts by offering more fruits and vegetables at home and talking about where food comes from.

Caleb Iehl, a Cedar Falls sophomore, understands “rabbit food” is good for him. He knows spinach is more nutritious than iceberg lettuce. He doesn’t mind eating salads. Sometimes he even chooses them over items like chili dogs. His friends also like the sliced pepper sticks.

However, making healthy choices can be hard when he is allowed only one small packet of dressing to cover his full-size salad. So he also grabbed a smaller side salad to get another dressing packet.

“There was one girl who used to bring a glass jar of dressing every day,” he said. Others have contemplated bringing bottles of ketchup, since that condiment has been severely limited, too.

Ecker said the sodium content in condiments dictates the portions. The district is looking at a reduced sodium option so students could take two packets. Food manufacturers also are working to cut sodium, but Ecker said most options are not yet available through the district’s food co-op.

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